The number of strange signals from space is on the rise 1) Recently, there has been evidence of new strange signals from space. Nature Magazine (https://go.nature.com/3ANWfmD) reports that an international research team led by Professor Li Di and Dr. Wang Pei of the National Astronomical Observatory of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (NAOC) has recorded the largest set of events to date FRB - the so-called fast radio bursts, received in record time from just one unknown source in deep space. Such signals were first caught in 2007. They are characterized by a very powerful burst of energy that takes milliseconds. Until last year, FRB signals were thought to be sporadic, but recent observations show that many of them actually repeat themselves with a certain cycle. Scientists hope that such a large packet set will finally allow determining the characteristics of the energy, including its distribution, of FRB signals. And the data obtained can be applied to other similar signals, which, ultimately, should shed light on the nature of these mysterious signals. The researchers emphasize that the FRB 121102 event is the first space "repeater" known to us. Scientists have traced the signals and determined that a dwarf galaxy is the likely source. The huge amount of signals received from there indicates that some kind of "permanent radio source" is located in this galaxy. 2) Astronomers in the framework of the radio survey of the sky with the ASKAP telescope discovered a variable source of highly polarized radiation, the nature of which is still a mystery. The properties of ASKAP J173608.2-321635 do not fit into the models of stars, neutron stars or X-ray binaries, but they do fit a completely new class of radio sources. A preprint of the work is available at arXiv.org. Ziteng Wang from the University of Sydney, together with other astronomers, discovered the compact variable radio source ASKAP J173608.2-321635, which was observed six times between January 2020 and September 2020 as part of the ASKAP VAST-P1 survey at a frequency of 888 megahertz and is located within 4 degrees from the center of the Milky Way in its plane. Analysis of the data available to astronomers made it possible to exclude stars, ordinary neutron stars and X-ray binaries from possible sources of radiation.